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PEOPLE OF THE EARTH People of the Earth is a narrative account of the prehistory of humankind from our origins over 3 million years ago to the first pre-industrial civilizations, beginning about 5,000 years ago. This is a global prehistory, which covers prehistoric times in every corner of the world, in a jargon-free style for newcomers to archaeology. Many world histories begin with the first civilizations. This book starts at the beginning of human history and summarizes the latest research into such major topics as human origins, the emergence and spread of modern humans, the first farming, and the origins of civilization. People of the Earth is unique in its even balance of the human past, in its readily accessible style, and its flowing narrative that carries the reader through the long sweep of our past. The book is highly illustrated, and features boxes and sidebars describing key dating methods and important archaeological sites. This classic world prehistory sets the standard for books on the subject and is the most widely used prehistory textbook in the world. It is aimed at introductory students in archaeology and anthropology taking survey courses on the prehistoric past, as well as more advanced readers. It will also appeal to students of human responses to climatic and environmental change. Brian M. Fagan is one of the world’s leading writers in the field of archaeology and an internationally recognized authority on world prehistory. He studied archaeology and anthropology at Pembroke College, Cambridge University, and then spent seven years working in sub-Saharan Africa. Now Professor Emeritus, from 1967 to 2003 he was Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Among his scholarly achievements, Professor Fagan was General Editor of the Oxford Companion to Archaeology and has written seven best-selling textbooks. He received the Society for American Archaeology’s first Public Education Award for his indefatigable efforts on behalf of archaeology and education. Nadia Durrani has contributed to a wide range of archaeological publications and is the former editor of Britain’s two best-selling archaeological magazines, Current World Archaeology and Current Archaeology. Over the years she has authored and edited countless articles and books, including co-editing several textbooks with Brian. Her background is in Arabian archaeology and, following a degree in archaeology and anthropology from Cambridge University, she took a PhD in South West Arabian archaeology from University College London. Nadia remains actively involved in Arabian studies and is on the board of the British Foundation for the Study of Arabia. She is also a founding member of the Great War Archaeology Group, and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries.
PEOPLE OF THE EARTH An Introduction to World Prehistory FIFTEENTH EDITION
Brian M. Fagan and Nadia Durrani
Fifteenth edition published 2019 by Routledge 52 Vanderbilt Avenue, New York, NY 10017 and by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4RN Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2019 Taylor & Francis The right of Brian M. Fagan and Nadia Durrani to be identified as authors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. First edition published by Little, Brown 1971 Ninth edition published by Pearson 2000 Fourteenth edition published by Pearson 2014 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Fagan, Brian M., author. | Durrani, Nadia, author. Title: People of the earth : an introduction to world prehistory / Brian M. Fagan and Nadia Durrani. Description: Fifteen edition. | Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2018. | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2017058041 (print) | LCCN 2018026186 (ebook) | ISBN 9781315193298 (Master) | ISBN 9781351757645 (ePUB) | ISBN 9781351757652 (Web PDF) | ISBN 9781351757638 (Mobi/Kindle) | ISBN 9781138722996 (hardback: alk. paper) | ISBN 9781138722965 (pbk. : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781315193298 (ebk) Subjects: LCSH: Prehistoric peoples. | Civilization, Ancient. Classification: LCC GN740 (ebook) | LCC GN740 .F33 2018 (print) | DDC 930.1—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017058041 ISBN: 978-1-138-72299-6 (hbk) ISBN: 978-1-138-72296-5 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-315-19329-8 (ebk) Typeset in Caslon by Swales & Willis Ltd, Exeter, Devon, UK Visit the companion website: www.routledge.com/cw/fagan
To
All the hundreds of archaeologists and students who have read and used this book in its various editions and sent us their comments and criticisms. This is the only way we can thank them all and expose them for what they are: honest and unmerciful critics. We are deeply grateful. And, as usual, thanks to Brian’s cats who disapprove of authors in general and of our writing efforts in particular.
Brief Contents 1 Introducing World Prehistory 1 PART I
BEGINNINGS 7 Million to 30,000 Years Ago 21
2 Human Origins: 7 Million to 1.9 Million Years Ago 22 3 Archaic Humans: 1.9 Million to 30,000 Years Ago 56 PART II THE GREAT DIASPORA: THE ORIGINS AND SPREAD OF MODERN HUMANS c. 350,000 Years Ago to Modern Times 85
4 5 6 7
Origins and the Diaspora Begins: c. 350,000 Years Ago and Later 86 Europe and Eurasia: c. 50,000 to 10,000 Years Ago 110 The First Americans: Around 15,000 Years Ago to Modern Times 135 After the Ice: Before 10,000 b.c. to Modern Times 160
PART III FIRST FARMERS c. 10,000 b.c. to Modern Times 177
8 9 10 11 12 13
Agriculture and Animal Domestication 178 The Origins of Food Production in Southwest Asia 193 The First European Farmers 205 First Farmers in Egypt and Tropical Africa 219 Asia and the Pacific: Rice, Roots, and Ocean Voyages 228 The Story of Maize: Early Farmers in the Americas 246
PART IV OLD WORLD CIVILIZATIONS c. 3000 b.c. to Modern Times 277
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 PART V
The Development of Civilization 278 Early Civilizations in Southwest Asia 294 Egypt, Nubia, and Tropical Africa 309 Early States in South and Southeast Asia 337 Early Chinese Civilization 356 Hittites, Minoans, and Mycenaeans 365 Europe Before the Romans 380
NATIVE AMERICAN CIVILIZATIONS Before 2000 b.c. to a.d. 1534 395
21 Mesoamerican Civilizations 396 22 Andean Civilizations 427
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Contents About the Authors xix Preface xx Acknowledgments xxiii Authors’ Note xxiv
Chapter 1 Introducing World Prehistory 1 Archaeology and Prehistory 2 The Beginnings of World Prehistory 4 Site: The Amesbury Archer 5 Science: Dating the Past 6 Who Needs the Past? 8 Cyclical and Linear Time 9 Written Records, Oral Traditions, and Archaeology 10
Studying Culture and Culture Change 10 Primary Cultural Processes 11 Theoretical Approaches: Culture as Adaptation 12 Climatic Change 12 Culture as Adaptation 12 Cultural Evolution and Cultural Ecology 13 Multilinear Evolution: Prestate and State-Organized Societies 13
Theoretical Approaches: Evolutionary Ecology and Hunter-Gatherers 15 Theoretical Approaches: People as Agents of Change 16 External and Internal Constraints 16 Interactions 17 Gender: Men and Women 17 Trade and Exchange 18 Ideologies and Beliefs 19
Summary 20 Further Reading 20
PART I
BEGINNINGS 7 Million to 30,000 Years Ago 21
Chapter 2 Human Origins: 7 Million to 1.9 Million Years Ago 22 The Great Ice Age 23 The Origins of the Human Line 24 Tracing Origins 25 Miocene Primates 26
Molecular Biology and Human Evolution 28 The Ecological Problems Faced by Early Hominins 29 Adaptive Problems 30
Dating the Past: Potassium-Argon Dating 31 ix
x Contents
Fossil Evidence: 7 to 4 Ma 32 Sahelanthropus tchadensis 32 Ardipithecus ramidus 34
The First Australopithecines: c. 4.2 to 3 Ma 34 Australopithecus anamensis 34 Australopithecus afarensis 34
Site: Laetoli—Footprints of Australopithecus afarensis 36
Fossil Evidence: 3.3 to 2 Ma 36 Gracile Australopithecines: Australopithecus africanus 36 Robust Australopithecines: A. aethiopicus, A. boisei, and A. robustus 36 Diversification: Australopithecus garhi, A./Kenyanthropus platyops, and A. sediba 37
Early Homo: 2.5 to c. 2.0 Ma 38 Homo habilis 38 A Burst of Rapid Change? 39
Site: Malapa, South Africa—The Mystery of Australopithecus sediba 39
Who Was the First Human? 40 Archaeological Evidence for Early Human Behavior 41 Evidence for “Central Places”? 42
Site: Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, East Africa 42 Hunting and Scavenging 44
Plant Foraging and “Grandmothering” 47 Toolmaking 48 The Oldowan Industry 48
The Mind of the Earliest Humans 51 The Development of Language and Speech 52 Social Organization 54 Summary 54 Further Reading 55
Chapter 3 Archaic Humans: 1.9 Million to 30,000 Years Ago 56 Pleistocene Background 57 Lower Pleistocene (2.6 Ma to c. 780,000 Years Ago) 57 Middle Pleistocene (c. 780,000 to 128,000 Years Ago) 57
Homo ergaster in Africa 58 The Radiation of Homo ergaster/erectus 62 Science: “You Are What You Eat”—Taming Fire and Then . . . Cuisine 64 Out of Africa: Homo erectus in Asia 65 Southeast Asia 65 China 65 Early Asian Technology 66
Moving to the North: The Settlement of Temperate Latitudes 67 Europe 68
Archaic Human Technology 70 Hand Axes and Other Tools 70 Hand Axes and the Evolution of the Human Mind 72
Evidence for Behavior: Boxgrove, Schöningen, and Torralba 73 Language and Speech 74 Site: A 400,000-Year-Old Hunt at Schöningen, Germany 75 The Neanderthals 75 Dating the Past: Radiocarbon Dating 77
Contents xi
A More Complex Technology 79 Levallois and Disk-Core-Reduction Strategies 79 Tool Forms and Variability 80
The Origins of Burial and Religious Belief 82 Neanderthal Speech and Language? 82 The Denisovans 83 Summary 83 Further Reading 84
PART II THE GREAT DIASPORA: THE ORIGINS AND SPREAD OF MODERN HUMANS c. 350,000 Years Ago to Modern Times 85
Chapter 4 O rigins and the Diaspora Begins: c. 350,000 Years Ago and Later 86 Origins 87 Where Did AMHs Originate? 87 Homo sapiens in Africa 88 AMHs: Droughts and Climate Change 92
Out of Africa 92 When Did Modern Cognitive Skills Appear? 93 Site: Exotic Islanders—Homo floresiensis 96 First H. Sapiens Settlement in East and Southeast Asia 96 Sunda and Sahul 97
New Guinea and Adjacent Islands 98 Australia 100 Ice Age Wallaby Hunters in Tasmania 102 Later Australian Cultures 103
African Hunter-Gatherers 104 Summary 108 Further Reading 109
Chapter 5 Europe and Eurasia: c. 50,000 to 10,000 Years Ago 110 Initial Brief Dispersal 112 Sustained Dispersal 112 The Upper Pleistocene (c. 126,000 to 10,000 Years Ago) 113 The First AMH Europeans 114 Neanderthals and Newcomers 118
Aurignacians and Their Successors (39,000 to 10,000 Years Ago) 119 Diverse and Predictable Food Resources 119 Social Life and Group Size 121
Site: Grotte de Chauvet, France 122 Art and the Symbolic World 123 Paintings and Engravings 123 Explaining the Cave Art 125
Settling Eurasia (39,000 to 15,000 Years Ago) 128 Siberia (?33,000 to 13,000 Years Ago) 130 The Settlement of Far Northeast Asia 131
Bifaces, Microblades, and the First Americans 132 Summary 133 Further Reading 134
xii Contents
Chapter 6 The First Americans: Around 15,000 Years Ago to Modern Times 135 The First Settlement of the Americas 136 Biological and Linguistic Evidence for the First Americans 138 Beringia and the Bering Land Bridge 139 The Beringian Standstill Hypothesis 141 The Archaeology of First Settlement 142 The First Settlement of Alaska 143
Settlement Routes 144 The Earliest Settlement South of the Ice Sheets 145 North America 146 Central and South America 146
A Scenario for First Settlement 146 The Paleo-Indians: Clovis and Others 147 Big-Game Extinctions 149
Later Hunters and Gatherers 150 Plains Hunters 151 The Desert West 152 Eastern North America 153 Site: Koster, Illinois 155 Specialized Foraging Societies in Central and South America 156 Aleuts and Inuit (Eskimo) 157 Summary 158 Further Reading 159
Chapter 7 After the Ice: Before 10,000 b.c. to Modern Times 160 The Holocene (After 10,000 b.c.) 161 Coping with Environmental Variation 164 Mesolithic Hunter-Gatherers in Europe 167 Site: Star Carr, England 168 Mesolithic Complexity in Scandinavia 170 The Maglemose Period (7500 to 5700 b.c.) 170 The Kongemose Period (5700 to 4600 b.c.) 170 The Ertebølle Period (4600 to 3200 b.c.) 170
Hunter-Gatherer Complexity 171 Conditions for Greater Complexity 172 Attributes of Greater Complexity 172 Debates About Social Complexity 172
Hunter-Gatherer Societies in Southwest Asia 173 The Natufian Culture (Before 11,000 to 8500 b.c.) 174
People of the Past: The Hilazon Tachtit Shaman, Israel, c. 10,400 b.c. 176
Summary 176 Further Reading 176
PART III
FIRST FARMERS c. 10,000 b.c. to Modern Times 177
Chapter 8 Agriculture and Animal Domestication 178 Theories About the Origins of Food Production 179 Early Hypotheses 179 Multivariate Theories 179
Contents xiii
Site: Guilá Naquitz, Mexico 181
Differing Dates for Food Production 182 Studying Early Food Production 183 Dating the Past: Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) Radiocarbon Dating 184 Why Did Food Production Take Hold So Late? 184 Consequences of Food Production 185 Nutrition and Early Food Production 186 Herding: Domestication of Animals 187 Plant Cultivation 188 Technology and Domestication 189 Summary 192 Further Reading 192
Chapter 9 The Origins of Food Production in Southwest Asia 193 Climate Change and Adaptation 194 The First Farmers 196 Pre-Pottery Neolithic A 196 Pre-Pottery Neolithic B 198
The Zagros and Mesopotamia 199 Zawi Chemi Shanidar 199 Ganj Dareh 199 Jarmo 199 Ali Kosh and the Lowlands 200
Early Farmers in Anatolia 200 Çatalhöyük: “History Houses” 201
Site: Ritual Buildings in Southeastern Turkey 202
Two Stages of Farming Development 204 Summary 204 Further Reading 204
Chapter 10 The First European Farmers 205 Mesolithic Prelude 206 The Transition to Farming in Europe 206 Farming in Greece and Southern Europe 208 The Spread of Agriculture into Temperate Europe 209 The Balkans 210 Bandkeramik Cultures 211
Frontiers and Transitions 212 Social Changes, Lineages, and the Individual 212 The Introduction of the Plow 214 Plains Farmers: Tripolye 214 Mediterranean and Western Europe 214 The Megaliths 215 Site: Easton Down and the Avebury Landscape 217 Summary 218 Further Reading 218
Chapter 11 First Farmers in Egypt and Tropical Africa 219 Hunter-Gatherers on the Nile 220 Agricultural Origins Along the Nile 222
xiv Contents
Saharan Pastoralists 224 Early Food Production in Sub-Saharan Africa 225 Summary 227 Further Reading 227
Chapter 12 Asia and the Pacific: Rice, Roots, and Ocean Voyages 228 The Origins of Rice Cultivation 229 Early Farming in China 230 Southern and Eastern China 230
Site: Early Rice Cultivation at Kuahuqiao, China 231 Northern China 232
Jomon and Early Agriculture in Japan 234 Early Agriculture in Southeast Asia 235 Site: The Princess of Khok Phanom Di, Thailand 236 Rice and Root Cultivation in Island Southeast Asia 237 Agriculture in the Pacific Islands 238 The Lapita Cultural Complex and the Settlement of Melanesia and Western Polynesia 239 Long-Distance Voyaging in the Pacific 240 Indigenous Pacific Navigation 241 The Settlement of Micronesia and Eastern Polynesia 241 The Settlement of New Zealand 243 Summary 245 Further Reading 245
Chapter 13 The Story of Maize: Early Farmers in the Americas 246 The First Plant Domestication 247 The Origins of Maize Agriculture 247 Beans and Squash 251
Early Food Production in the Andes 252 The Highlands 252 The Peruvian Coast 253
Early Farmers in Southwestern North America 255 Hohokam 257 Mogollon 258 Ancestral Pueblo 258
Site: The Chaco Phenomenon 259
Preagricultural and Agricultural Societies in Eastern North America 262 Moundbuilder Cultures 262 Early Woodland (Adena) 263 Hopewell 264 Mississippian 266
Human Settlement in the Caribbean 271 First Settlement (Preceramic Cultures) 272 Saladoid Migrations 273 Taíno Chiefdoms 273
Summary 274 Further Reading 275
Contents xv
PART IV
OLD WORLD CIVILIZATIONS c. 3000 b.c. to Modern Times 277
Chapter 14 The Development of Civilization 278 Civilization 279 Cities 280 Six Classic Theories of the Emergence of States 280 V. Gordon Childe and the “Urban Revolution” 281 Ecology and Irrigation 282 Technology and Trade 284 Warfare 286 Cultural Systems and Civilization 286 Environmental Change 287
Social Theories 288 Power in Three Domains 288
Site: The Lord of Sicán at Huaca Loro, Peru 289 Chiefly Cycling: Processes and Agents 290
Imploding Civilizations 292 Summary 293 Further Reading 293
Chapter 15 Early Civilizations in Southwest Asia 294 Upland Villages 295 Settlement of the Lowlands 297 Environmental Change 298 Archaeological Evidence 298
Site: The Temple at Eridu, Iraq 299
Uruk: The Mesopotamian City 300 Sumerian Civilization 302 Exchange on the Iranian Plateau 303 The Widening of Political Authority 305 The Akkadians 306 Babylon 306 The Assyrians 306 Summary 308 Further Reading 308
Chapter 16 Egypt, Nubia, and Tropical Africa 309 The Origins of the Egyptian State 310 Ancient Monopoly? 310 Naqada, Nekhen, and Maadi 310 Writing 312 A Scenario for Unification 313 Intensification of Agriculture and Irrigation 313
Archaic Egypt and the Creation of the Great Culture (2920 to 2575 b.c.) 314 The Old Kingdom and the Pyramids (c. 2575 to 2180 b.c.) 316 Site: The Step Pyramid at Saqqara, Egypt 317
xvi Contents
The Egyptian State 318 The First Intermediate Period and the Middle Kingdom (2180 to 1640 b.c.) 319 The Second Intermediate Period (1640 to 1530 b.c.) 321 The New Kingdom (1530 to 1070 b.c.) 321 The “Estate of Amun” 322 Amarna and Akhenaten 323
Science: Mummies and Mummification 324 The Restoration of Amun 324
The Late Period (1070 to 332 b.c.) 325 Egypt and Africa 326 Nubia: The Land of Kush 327 Meroe and Aksum 328 North Africa 330 Jenne-jeno and the Rise of West African States 331 Ghana 332 Mali 332 Songhay 333
Farmers and Traders in Eastern and Southern Africa 333 Towns and Trade on the East African Coast 333 Great Zimbabwe 334
Europe and Africa 335 Summary 335 Further Reading 336
Chapter 17 Early States in South and Southeast Asia 337 The Roots of South Asian Civilization 338 Highlands and Lowlands: The Kulli Complex 340 A Rapid Transition 340 Mature Indus Civilization 341 Who Were the Indus People? 344
Indus Civilization Beliefs 345 South Asia After the Indus Civilization 346 Southeast Asian States 347 Dong Son 349 Trade and Kingdoms 350 The Rise of the God-Kings 351
The Angkor State (a.d. 802 to 1430) 351 Site: Angkor Wat, Cambodia 352 Science: LIDAR Rewrites Angkor Wat 354 Summary 355 Further Reading 355
Chapter 18 Early Chinese Civilization 356 The Origins of Chinese Civilization 357 Longshan and Liangzhu 358 Shoulder Blades and Oracles 359
Erlitou: Xia and Shang 360 Capitals and Sepulchers 361 The Shang Royal Burials 361 The Bronze Smiths 362
Contents xvii
The Warlords 362 Site: The Burial Mound of Emperor Shihuangdi, China 363 Summary 364 Further Reading 364
Chapter 19 Hittites, Minoans, and Mycenaeans 365 Early Towns in Anatolia 366 Balance of Power: The Hittites 367 The Sea Peoples and the Rise of Israel 369 The Phoenicians 370 The Aegean and Greece 370 The Minoans 371 The Mycenaeans 373 Greek City-States After Mycenae 375 The Etruscans and the Romans 376 The Etruscans 376
Site: The Mycenaean Shrine at Phylakopi, Melos Island, Greece 377 The Romans 378
Summary 379 Further Reading 379
Chapter 20 Europe Before the Romans 380 Early Copper Working 381 Battle Axes and Beakers 383 Site: Must Farm, Cambridgeshire, UK 384 The European Bronze Age 384 Site: Ötzi the Iceman, Similaun Glacier, Italian Alps 385 Bronze Age Warriors 387 Site: Stonehenge, England 389 The Scythians and Other Steppe Peoples 389 The First Ironworking 390 The Hallstatt Culture 392 La Tène Culture 392 Summary 393 Further Reading 393
PART V
NATIVE AMERICAN CIVILIZATIONS Before 2000 b.c. to A.D. 1534 395
Chapter 21 Mesoamerican Civilizations 396 Village Farming 397 Preclassic Peoples in Mesoamerica 399 Early Preclassic 399 Middle Preclassic: The Olmec 399 Late Preclassic 401
The Rise of Complex Society in Oaxaca 402 Monte Albán 403 Teotihuacán 404 Maya Civilization 407
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Maya Origins 407 Water Management 409 Kingship: Sacred Space and Time 410 Political Organization 412 Classic and Late Classic Maya Political History 413
Site: Architecture as a Political Statement: The Hieroglyphic Stairway at Copán, Honduras 418
The Ninth-Century Collapse 419 The Toltecs 420 Aztec Civilization and the Spanish Conquest 422 Summary 425 Further Reading 426
Chapter 22 Andean Civilizations 427 The Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization 430 Coastal Foundations: The Initial Period 431 Caral 431 El Paraíso and Huaca Florida 432
Chavín de Huántar 434 People of the Past: “And the Trumpet Shall Sound”—Chavín de Huantar, Peru, a.d. 800 436 Paracas: Textiles and Coastal Prehistory 437 Complex Society in the Southern Highlands: Chiripa and Pukara 438 The Early Intermediate Period 438 The Moche State 439 Site: The Lords of Sipán, Peru 440 The Middle Horizon: Tiwanaku and Wari 443 Tiwanaku 443 Wari 444
The Late Intermediate Period: Sicán and Chimor 444 The Late Horizon: The Inca State 447 Amazonia 451 The Spanish Conquest (1532 to 1534) 451 Summary 452 Further Reading 453 Glossary of Technical Terms 454 Bibliography of World Prehistory 460 Credits 485 Index 487
About the Authors Brian Fagan
is one of the world’s leading writers in the field of archaeology and an internationally recognized authority on world prehistory. He studied archaeology and anthropology at Pembroke College, Cambridge University, and then spent seven years in sub-Saharan Africa working in museums and in monuments conservation and excavating early farming sites in Zambia and East Africa. He was one of the pioneers of multidisciplinary African history in the 1960s. Now Professor Emeritus, from 1967 to 2003 he was Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Professor Fagan has written seven best-selling textbooks—Ancient Lives: An Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory; In the Beginning; Archaeology: A Brief Introduction; World Prehistory; Ancient Civilizations (with Chris Scarre); A Brief History of Archaeology; and this volume—which are used around the world. His general books include The Rape of the Nile, a classic history of Egyptology; The Adventure of Archaeology; Ancient North America; The Little Ice Age; The Long Summer; Chaco Canyon; Fish on Friday; The Great Warming; and Elixir: A History of Humankind and Water. He was also General Editor of the Oxford Companion to Archaeology. In addition, he has published several scholarly monographs on African archaeology and numerous specialized articles in national and international journals. He was the recipient of the Society for American Archaeology’s first Public Education Award for his indefatigable efforts on behalf of archaeology and education. Brian Fagan’s other interests include cycling, sailing, kayaking, and good food. He lives in Santa Barbara with his wife and daughter, three cats (who supervise his writing), and last but not least, a minimum of seven rabbits.
Nadia Durrani is an archaeologist and writer. She contributes to a wide range of archaeologi-
cal publications and is the former editor of Britain’s two best-selling archaeological magazines, Current World Archaeology and Current Archaeology. Over the years she has authored and edited countless articles on archaeology from every corner of the globe. Nadia has also co-edited several textbooks with Brian, contributed to dozens of other books, and written two—The Tihamah Coastal Plain of SouthWest Arabia; and In Search of the Zeppelin War: The Archaeology of the First Blitz (with Neil Faulkner). Her background is in Arabian archaeology and, following a degree in archaeology and anthropology from Cambridge University, she took a PhD in South West Arabian archaeology from University College London (2001). Nadia remains actively involved in Arabian studies and is on the board of the British Foundation for the Study of Arabia. She is also a founding member of the Great War Archaeology Group, and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries. She lives in London with her husband and young son.
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Preface
G
olden pharaohs, lost cities, grinning human skeletons—archaeology is the stuff of romance and legend. Many people still think of archaeologists as adventurers and treasure hunters, like Indiana Jones of Hollywood movie fame seeking the elusive Crystal Skull. This enduring image goes back to the late nineteenth century, when archaeologists like Austin Henry Layard of Nineveh fame could still find lost civilizations and excavate three royal palaces in a week. Today, no archaeologists behave like Indiana Jones. They are scientists, not adventurers, as comfortable in an airconditioned laboratory as they are on a remote excavation. The development of scientific archaeology from its Victorian beginnings ranked among the greatest triumphs of twentieth-century science. Archaeology has changed our perceptions of ourselves in profound ways, giving us a better understanding of our biological and cultural diversity. Welcome to the fascinating world of archaeology!
New to This Edition •• Chapter 1 introduces world prehistory and presents new insights on the human past, including the latest theoretical advances. •• Chapters 2–6 have been completely reorganized and rewritten. They reflect new thinking and discoveries that alter our perceptions of the archaic world and human origins. •• Chapter 4 now covers the origins of anatomically modern humans, Homo sapiens, previously summarized in Chapter 3. •• Chapter 6 presents the latest evidence on the first settlement of the Americas. New sites and innovative hypotheses enliven the long debates on the subject. •• Chapter 7 includes new information on changes in hunter-gatherer societies at the end of the Ice Age, especially in Southwest Asia. •• Chapter 9 has been completely rewritten and updated to include the exciting discoveries of recent years that are changing our ideas on early farming in Southwest Asia profoundly, including climate change. •• Chapters 11–13 have been updated with new information and recent discoveries. •• Chapter 14 has been updated to include the latest theories on the origins of states and civilizations. •• Chapters 15–20 now reflect the latest discoveries on such topics as Stonehenge and the Shang civilization. •• Chapters 21 and 22 on Native American civilizations have been revised throughout to keep up with a new torrent of finds and fresh perceptions. •• Science and Site boxes throughout the text cover key concepts like radiocarbon dating, and present important new discoveries (and some older well-known ones) in more detail. Many are newly written for this edition. Examples include the spectacular Grotte de Chauvet cave paintings in France and the Lords of Sipán from coastal Peru, two of the most important archaeological discoveries of the twentieth century. •• There are major changes in the illustrations throughout the book. This fifteenth edition of People of the Earth comes at a time when new discoveries and archaeological methodologies are deeply affecting our understanding of the human past. This edition continues an over 40-year tradition of clear, jargon-free writing for the beginning student, the incorporation of the latest scholarship, and an accessible (five-part) organization of the story of world prehistory. This is a straightforward narrative, written by two authors (not the work of multiple scholars), which gives the book a coherence often lacking in edited volumes. The basic objective is a simple one: to provide an interesting journey through the 7-million-year-old landscape of the human past. At the same time, the book attempts to achieve geographic balance, giving equal time to both well-trodden and less well-known parts of the world. Any world prehistory that does otherwise is presenting a skewed picture of the human past. People of the Earth is an adventure in archaeology. We hope you enjoy your sojourn in its pages. xx
Preface xxi
Writing a straightforward narrative of human prehistory is a mammoth task, especially at a time when a torrent of new literature about archaeological discoveries around the world is revolutionizing our knowledge of the remote past. We are well beyond the point where only two authors can possibly hope to keep up with every new find and intellectual development in world archaeology, but we have done our best, while trying to keep the narrative as simple and uncluttered as possible, without undue emphasis on individual sites or human societies. This narrative of world prehistory is divided into five parts. Part I (Chapters 2 and 3) discusses human beginnings—what is sometimes called “archaic world,” the human past from the earliest times up to the appearance of Homo sapiens, ourselves. Here we cover important new discoveries, including the current work at Jebel Irhoud in Morocco which is pushing back the date of the earliest known H. sapiens by over 100,000 years, as well as fascinating sites such as Boxgrove in southern England. We also continue to take account of new theoretical advances in cognitive, or “post-processual,” archaeology, especially of the emerging synthesis of evolutionary psychology and archaeology. Part II (Chapters 4 to 7) discusses what we call the “Great Diaspora,” the spread of anatomically modern humans throughout the world during and immediately after the late Ice Age. We go from Southwest Asia to South and East Asia, also Southeast Asia, tracing some of the earliest forays of modern humans, culminating in the settlement of Australia and the southwestern Pacific islands, before returning to tropical Africa Then we follow moderns as they colonize Europe and Eurasia, and ultimately the Americas, a logical order preferred by many users. Part II includes coverage of the new AMS radiocarbon chronology for first settlement, made possible by extended calibration curves. “After the Ice,” which follows, leads into the chapters on the first farmers. Part III describes the origins of food production, with Chapter 8 devoted to the theoretical background and the following five chapters discussing the earliest farming in different areas of the world. New discussions in this edition include the increasing impact of refined AMS chronologies, genetic fingerprinting of potentially domesticable animals and plants, and a fresh generation of research into the origins of rice cultivation. Important new perceptions of the Mississippian and other, more complex farming societies in eastern North America also receive extended treatment. Parts IV and V cover the early civilizations of the Old World and the Americas, with Chapter 14 describing the major theories of the origins and collapse of states. The ferment of theorizing has diminished somewhat in recent years as fieldworkers wrestle to document their theories with new data from the field. At the same time, a new emphasis on ideology and the archaeology of the intangible is throwing fresh light on preindustrial civilization. There is expanded coverage of the origins of Egyptian civilization, as well as of South and Southeast Asian states. Maya archaeology has been revolutionized in recent years by the decipherment of ancient glyphs and by our new understandings of the turbulent political history of Maya states. We take account of some of these advances here, but, alas, do not have space for extended coverage. As always, the book is designed for easy accessibility and effective learning. People of the Earth is free of distracting features that draw the reader away from the main narrative. High-interest chapter-opening vignettes, which describe a moment of discovery or reconstruct life in the past, grab the student’s interest from the outset. Chronological tables at the beginning of most chapters, as well as chapter summaries at the end of each chapter, also add to the effectiveness of the book as a learning tool. Other pedagogical features include the following: •• Special timeline columns at the opening of each part of the book. By means of varied color, each timeline tells at a glance which period the part covers, as well as which periods have already been covered and are yet to be covered in the text. •• Expanded picture captions that augment the visual information. •• Double-page spreads that provide up-to-date overviews of major themes and developments in human prehistory.
Support for Instructors and Students Please visit the companion website at www.routledge.com/cw/fagan
A Note on the World Wide Web The World Wide Web is an important medium of communication for archaeologists. Some of the more important sites offer links to other useful locations, as listed below. First off, we recommend you visit the virtual library for archaeology worldwide at ArchNet: http://archnet.asu.edu.
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This site is both geographically and subject matter based, covering everything from the archaeology of Australia to method and theory and site tours. There are also listings of academic departments, museums, and other archaeological organizations, even of journals. ArchNet is an extraordinary resource; it does not claim to be comprehensive but, nonetheless, covers a huge range of topics. The European equivalent is ARGE, the Archaeological Resource Guide for Europe: www.let.rug. nl/arge/. This site also lists areas and subjects, and is multilingual. Both ArchNet and ARGE have links to virtually any subfield of archaeology you are looking for. Many departments of anthropology and archaeology and dozens of excavations and sites have websites, which you can access through ArchNet. For example, for information on archaeology in Southwest Asia and the eastern Mediterranean, go to www.argonet.co.uk/. When seeking out information, it is worth remembering that the official websites of projects, museums, and universities are typically excellent sources of data, whereas those authored by interested members of the public, and indeed nonspecialist journalists, should be read with caution. Happy surfing!
Acknowledgments This fifteenth edition has benefited greatly from the willing comments of many colleagues—alas, too many to name individually. However, we would like to send our special thanks to Professors Robert Foley (Cambridge University) and Paul Pettitt (Durham University), and also to Rob’s doctoral student, Laura van Holstein. Thank you all three for giving us your time and careful feedback on a number of the early chapters. We appreciate it very much. In addition, we would like to thank the following archaeologists for their reviews: Amanuel Beyin, Michael Harrower, Susan Johnston, Keir Strickland, and Frederick H. Smith. We are grateful for their frank comments. We also want to thank the many instructors and users who have contacted us to correct errors, provide references, or make other useful suggestions. Lastly, our thanks to the editorial and production staff at Routledge. Without them, this revision would never have been completed. As always, we would be most grateful for criticisms, comments, or details of new work, sent to us at [email protected]. Brian Fagan Nadia Durrani
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Authors’ Note Conventions for Dates and Measurements The following conventions are used for dates in this book: b.p. Years before present. In general, years before 40,000 b.p. are given in years before present, whereas dates after 12,000 b.p. are invariably expressed as b.c./a.d., unless the context is obvious. Ma Million years ago. b.c./a.d. To avoid confusion, we use the common b.c./a.d. Another common convention is b.c.e./c.e. (Before the Common Era/Common Era), which is not used in this book. “Present” By scientific convention, “present” is a.d. 1950. For clarity, all radiocarbon and potassium-argon dates are quoted here without their statistical errors. However, readers should be aware that such calculations exist for every chronometric date in this book. All measurements are given in metric, with miles, yards, feet, and inch equivalents, as this is now common scientific convention.
Calibration of Radiocarbon Dates The calibration of radiocarbon dates has now reached a high degree of refinement, as scientists develop ever more accurate time scales for the past 15,000 years, using tree-ring, coral, and ice-core data. It should be stressed that these calibrations are provisional, statistically based, and subject to modification, especially before 7000 b.c.
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Introducing World Prehistory
1 CHAPTER OUTLINE
Archaeology and Prehistory
T
he two men paused in front of the doorway that bore the seals of the long-dead pharaoh. They had waited six long years, from 1917 to 1922, for this moment. Silently, Howard Carter pried a hole through the ancient plaster. Hot air rushed out of the small cavity and massaged his face. Carter shone a flashlight through the hole and peered into the tomb. Gold objects swam in front of his eyes, and he was struck dumb with amazement. Lord Carnarvon moved impatiently behind him as Carter remained silent. “Can you see anything?” he asked, hoarse with excitement. “Yes, wonderful things,” whispered Carter as he stepped back from the doorway. They soon broke down the door. In a daze of wonderment, Carter and Carnarvon wandered through the antechamber of Tutankhamun’s tomb. They fingered golden funerary beds, admired beautifully inlaid chests, and examined the pharaoh’s chariots stacked against the wall. Gold was everywhere—on wooden statues, inlaid on thrones and boxes, in jewelry, even on children’s stools (Reeves, 1990). Soon Tutankhamun was known as the golden pharaoh, and archaeology as the domain of buried treasure and royal sepulchers (Figure 1.1).
The Beginnings of World Prehistory Who Needs the Past? Studying Culture and Culture Change Primary Cultural Processes Theoretical Approaches: Culture as Adaptation Theoretical Approaches: Evolutionary Ecology and Hunter-Gatherers Theoretical Approaches: People as Agents of Change
The White House, Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, c. a.d. 1200. 1
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FIGURE 1.1 Howard Carter works on the pharaoh Tutankhamun’s sarcophagus, 1922. Photography by Egyptian Expedition, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
old, silver, lost civilizations, unsolved mysteries, grinning skeletons—all are part of the romantic world of archaeology in most people’s minds. Archaeologists seem like adventurers, digging into pyramids and finding long-forgotten inscriptions in remote places. Like Indiana Jones of movie fame, we seem to be students of sunken continents and great migrations, experts on epic journeys and powerful civilizations. A century ago, many archaeologists were indeed adventurers. Even as late as the 1870s, you could go out digging in Southwest Asia and find a long-lost civilization. German businessman turned archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann was convinced that Homer’s Troy had existed. Armed with a copy of the Iliad, he went to Turkey and cut great trenches into the ancient mounds at Hissarlik in northwest Turkey. Schliemann found the remains of nine cities stratified one atop the other and announced that the seventh was Homer’s Troy (Traill, 1995). His discoveries caused an international sensation. So did Frenchman Emil de Sarzec when he unearthed Sumer in desolate southern Mesopotamia, a civilization that soon turned out to be one of the earliest in the world and the society where the Flood legend in Genesis probably originated (Fagan and Durrani, 2016) (Figure 1.2). Today, however, the excitement of the detective story has replaced the fascination of great adventure. Fictional detectives take a handful of clues and solve apparently insoluble murders. Archaeologists take a multitude of small and apparently trivial archaeological finds and use them to answer basic questions about past human behavior. The twentieth century saw archaeology turn from a casual treasure hunt into a complex and demanding science (Fagan, 1985, 2005b). There have been dramatic discoveries by the dozens: Tutankhamun’s tomb in 1922; the royal cemetery at Ur in Iraq in 1928; the spectacular early human fossils discovered by the Leakey family in East Africa during the last quarter of the century; and the magnificent royal burials in China and Peru in the 1980s and 1990s. Although these finds have stirred the popular imagination, archaeologists have been engaged in a less conspicuous but just as fascinating adventure of discovery— through over 3 million years of the human past. People of the Earth takes you on a journey through these 3 million years, from the origins of the first humans through the evolution of modern humanity—ourselves—to the last 5,000 years, when literate civilizations appeared on earth. This is a book about the prehistory of humankind.
Archaeology and Prehistory FIGURE 1.2 The famous “Flood Tablet” from the Assyrian king Assurbanipal’s library at Nineveh. The tablet, found by epigrapher George Smith in 1873, records the story of a flood that bears a remarkable resemblance to the one described in Genesis. This was a copy of a much earlier Sumerian legend which dates from long before the writing down of the Old Testament. Copyright The British Museum.
Contrary to popular belief, archaeologists do not study dinosaurs, for ancient fossil animals are the scholarly province of paleontologists. Archaeologists are anthropologists. Anthropology is the biological and cultural study of all humanity, ancient and modern. Cultural (or social) anthropologists are typically concerned with living societies, whereas archaeologists usually study the human cultures and societies of the past. (No attempt is made to describe the basic principles, methods, and theoretical approaches of archaeology in this book. For information, the reader should consult one of the following widely available college texts: Fagan and Durrani, 2018; Renfrew and Bahn, 2016; Sharer and Ashmore, 2013; Thomas and Kelly, 2017.) A British archaeologist once described archaeology as “the science of rubbish,” a somewhat apt description, for archaeologists do indeed spend much of their time delving into the garbage heaps and middens of long-vanished human societies. Archaeology is the study of past human behavior based on surviving material finds. These material remains come in many forms: as crude or finely made stone artifacts tens of thousands, even millions, of years old; as durable pot fragments from
CHAPTER 1 Introducing World Prehistory 3
dumperina
FIGURE 1.3 Excavated prehistoric houses at Skara Brae, Orkney Islands, Scotland, occupied c. 3000 b.c.
clay vessels used by early farmers; as house foundations; as seeds and broken food bones; in the form of cave paintings; and, when preservation conditions permit, as wooden artifacts, textiles, or human corpses. All these finds constitute the archaeological record, the archives of the past, which can be made up of surviving finds resulting from ancient human behavior. Reconstructing this behavior from such fragmentary records requires great scientific skill, insight, and creativity. Imagine trying to reconstruct twentieth-century life from a handful of artifacts, including two broken plates, a spark plug, a computer keyboard, three cow bones, and an aluminum beer can tab, and you will realize the challenge facing students of the remote past (Figure 1.3). We use the word remote deliberately. Though some archaeologists deal with sites from the last (and even this) century, most of the archaeological research described in this book deals with biological and cultural developments thousands of years back in the past, with long-vanished environments and societies that lived on earth when it was very different. Few people realize just how much the world has changed during the past 3 million years, and especially during the past 780,000 years, when the constant climatic fluctuations of the Ice Age have kept global climate in a state of transition from extreme cold to warmer conditions (see Chapters 2 to 4). Only 15,000 years ago, the world was in the grip of a major glacial episode that covered much of northern Europe and North America with vast ice sheets, lowered sea levels everywhere by about 91 m (300 feet), and resulted in open, treeless plains from western France to Siberia. England was part of the European continent; Siberia was joined to Alaska; and Borneo was part of mainland Southeast Asia. The human inhabitants of this late Ice Age world lived on a planet unimaginably different from our own, which makes it doubly hard for us to reconstruct and explain their societies. For the past 5,000 years, humans have used writing as a means of recording business transactions, making inventories of commodities, and measuring the passage of time (Robinson, 2015). From these simple records developed far more sophisticated writings: primordial epics and poems; king lists; histories and literature itself; written archives preserved on clay tablets and papyrus reed documents or as inscriptions on stone and eventually on parchment and paper. Such archives are the realm of historians, scholars who study the written records of the past. History is very different from archaeology. Although eclectic in their interests, historians work with documents. These may be chronicles of individual deeds, or of great kings and lords anxious to trumpet their triumphs or justify their doings. They also study more prosaic archives: the records of royal palaces and governments, the day-to-day transactions of officialdom, to gain wider perspectives on every aspect of society from religious beliefs to food supplies, trade, and social interactions. In contrast, archaeology is, most of the time, entirely anonymous. Its chronologies are not the years, even hours and minutes, found in history books but are much larger chunks of time, rarely shorter than
4 CHAPTER 1 Introducing World Prehistory
a half century or a generation. The archaeologist’s past is usually without written records to fill in vital gaps. Even when documents are available to amplify historical records on, say, the Egypt of Pharaoh Rameses II or the rituals celebrated by a Maya lord, archaeology brings a unique quality to the past. Only a few people in ancient societies were literate, so the scope of written records is immediately limited. But archaeologists study artifacts and food remains, a dispassionate record of all ancient human behavior, whether that of a monarch or an anonymous sea captain and his crew wrecked on the cliffs of southern Turkey. By excavating the humble dwellings of common folk or the middens of imposing palaces, also studying burials and human remains, among other finds, archaeologists add new dimensions to the study of even societies that are well documented with written records of all kinds (see the Site box—The Amesbury Archer). Archaeologists make a clear distinction between two major types of archaeology: • Text-aided archaeology is archaeology practiced with the aid of historical documents. Many of the civilizations described in Parts IV and V of this book involve specialist archaeologists, such as Assyriologists, Egyptologists, or Mayanists, who have at least some expertise in ancient scripts. Text-aided archaeology is confined to societies that have flourished during the past 5,000 years and sometimes provides fascinating insights into the people of the past. At the Roman frontier settlement at Vindolanda by Hadrian’s Wall in northern England, slivers of bark paper dating to a.d. 95 to 105 have preserved intimate details of life on the wall. We learn that only 265 men, including 1 centurion, were at Vindolanda itself and “fit and well.” The rest were serving elsewhere. Store inventories reveal allocations to soldiers and punishments. Occasionally, the correspondence takes a more personal note. “Why have you not written back to me for such a long time about our parents?” laments a soldier named Chrautius to an old messmate in distant London. “I have sent you . . . woolen socks . . . two pairs of sandals and two pairs of underpants,” writes a friend of a Vindolanda officer, who was thankful for the gift. There are even fragments of school tablets, one a copy of a passage from Virgil’s Aeneid, with the notation in another hand: “sloppy work” (Birley, 2009). • Prehistoric archaeology is the archaeology of ancient societies that were nonliterate. The term période anti-historique was coined by French archaeologist Paul Tournal in 1833 for the period of human history extending back before the time of written documents (Grayson, 1983). In time, this phrase shrank to prehistory, and it now encompasses the enormous span of human cultural evolution that extends back at least 3.3 million years. People of the Earth is about both prehistoric and text-aided archaeology. We draw on archaeology, geological evidence, linguistic and biological data, oral traditions, historical records, and many other sources of information about 3 million years of the human past, sometimes called world prehistory. Some people, notably Native Americans, object to the word prehistoric. They feel it implies racial inferiority and expresses the belief that people without written documents have no worthwhile history. These objections are part of a wider debate about the ownership of the past and about archaeology’s role in modern society (see the section “Who Needs the Past?” in this chapter). Prehistory and prehistoric are convenient, and long-established, scientific terms without any pejorative implications. Although it is true that a century ago many scholars classified human societies in racist terms, those days are long gone. Modern archaeologists study both literate and nonliterate societies and how they changed without making any value judgments as to their superiority or inferiority to the archaeologists’ own society. Their concern is the broad sweep of the human past, for scientific archaeology is a unique way of studying culture change in human societies over enormously long periods of time. From about 3000 b.c., written records and oral histories provide useful perspectives on the past. But in most areas of the world, these sources have but a limited chronological span. And earlier than that, the past is a blank, featureless landscape that can be filled in only by archaeological research.
The Beginnings of World Prehistory Until the mid-nineteenth century, most Westerners believed that the Old Testament recorded the study of human origins. God created the world and humanity in six days and rested on the seventh. Under Christian dogma of the day, the stories of Adam and Eve, and of Noah’s Ark, were the literal historical truth. The seventeenth-century Irish Archbishop James Ussher went even further and used the genealogies in the Bible to calculate the date of the creation—the night preceding October 23, 4004 b.c. His calculations allowed about 6,000 years for all human history. New geological, anthropological, and archaeological discoveries soon began to cast doubt on biblical chronologies. Geological observations presented evidence of gradual change over long periods of time through natural processes such as flooding and erosion, what became known as the doctrine of
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SiTE > The Amesbury Archer
Laetoli: Footprints of Australopithecus afarensis
Malapa, South Africa: The Mystery of Australopithecus sediba
Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, East Africa
A 400,000-Year-Old Hunt at Schöningen, Germany
Exotic Islanders: Homo floresiensis
Ritual Buildings in Southeastern Turkey
Easton Down and the Avebury Landscape
Early Rice Cultivation at Kuahuqiao, China
The Princess of Khok Phanom Di, Thailand
The Burial Mound of Emperor Shihuangdi, China
The Mycenaean Shrine at Phylakopi, Melos Island, Greece
Must Farm, Cambridgeshire, UK
Ötzi the Iceman, Similaun Glacier, Italian Alps
Stonehenge, England
Architecture as a Political Statement: The Hieroglyphic Stairway at Copán, Honduras
The Lords of Sipán, Peru